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[personal profile] rhu

So as I understand it, the so-called groundbreaking law passed this week here in Massachusetts is a triumph for insurance companies and politicians. I don't see how it helps the uninsured.

  • Employers who don't offer insurance will be fined $300 per employee per year. Since insurance premiums are about ten times that, I don't see how this will incentivize any employer who hasn't already chosen to offer insurance to do so.
  • Individuals who choose not to purchase insurance will lose their $150 per person exemption on their state income taxes. Again, if a healthy well-off twenty-something chooses to self-insure rather than pay premiums, this won't change that person's calculations.
  • Individuals who can't afford to buy insurance, even once the government certifies one or more insurance plans as "affordable" (which is yet to be defined), are the ones who will be most hurt by losing the $150.

So congratulations to Presidentialcandidate (formerly known as Governor) Romney and the Great and General Court for getting adulatory press for "providing universal coverage" by imposing an unfunded mandate on the individual citizen.

After all, if it's illegal to be uninsured, only criminals will lack health coverage.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-04-09 12:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lucretia-borgia.livejournal.com
And the idea is that by requiring those who can afford it to buy insurance, the pool of insured people grows, thus theoretically leading to lower premiums.

Not to be a total cynic, but the insurance companies will have a great argument for raising the premiums further. You see, NOW they'll have this mess of formerly uninsured poor people -- those most likely to have health problems going into the system, since they had no or poor (preventive and acute) health care before, and still have poor dietary options because they can't afford fresh veggies and good meat and whole grains and whathaveyou, are more likely to have children with health problems, esp. asthma, and are more likely to need emergency care as victims of violence -- who are adding to the insurance companies' costs. The number of healthy individuals who could afford insurance but don't and who would theoretically be added to the rolls is (according to one of the pieces in today's Globe) around 50K. That's not enough to drive costs down by increasing the pool.

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Andrew M. Greene

January 2013

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